Saturday, October 23, 2010

Guest Post: C.J. Bott on Words -- One Weapon We All Own

Words are powerful. They are learned early, and they bruise forever. Who would have thought that combinations of 26 letters could cause so much pain, humiliation, and violence? But they do. Words hurt and when that preschooler learns that first powerful word—“stupid”--the pattern is established. Childhood words grow into permanent labels and into hate slurs.

Nearly all forms of bullying contain some verbal harassment in either oral or written form. It is hard to bully someone you have never talked to or about. The Internet has simply given us another way to deliver the message.

Words carry good messages too. Many authors of children’s and teen books are using their words to talk about bullying and have given us hundreds of books that provide an objective way to talk about bullying. Here are some titles.

In Nothing Wrong With a Three-Legged Dog (Yearling, 2001), Graham McNamee gives readers Keath, the only white kid in his fourth grade class, who's called “Whitey,” “Va-nilla” and “Mayonnaise,” and his best friend Lynda hears “Zebra” because she has a black mother and a white father.

The Misfits by James Howe (Atheneum, 2001) has four main characters: Bobby, Skeezie, Joe and Addie—together they are called 70 names. That book has started a national movement against name-calling. (For more information, go to www.nonamecallingweek.org.)

Jupiter Jason Glazer, formerly of Russia, wants very badly to be accepted but knows first he has to lose his accent in Losers by Matthue Roth (Push, 2008).

High School

Jujube finds a way to end the sexual harassment in whispered hallway slurs and bathroom graffiti in Sticks and Stones by Beth Goobie (Orca, 2006).

In Whale Talk (Greenwillow, 2001), Chris Crutcher presents T.J., an adopted young man with a many-cultures heritage, and his swim team of kids who do not fit into the “norm.”

With bug eyes, pinched face, hearing aids, and a rounded back, David hears the word “Freak” hundreds of time each day—until the principal decides David is the problem at school in Defect by Will Weaver (FSG, 2007).

Alma Fullerton’s In the Garage (Red Deer, 2006) centers on the friendship between BJ and Alex that grew after Alex rescued BJ from the verbal attack of fifth graders. In high school Alex is attacked and killed by homophobic classmates.

Words created a false reputation, built by boys’ egos and spread by jealous girls, destroyed Hannah Baker’s life, but she finds a new way to her tell her story after she commits suicide in Jay Asher’s Thirteen Reasons Why (Razorbill, 2007).

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New York Times & Publishers Weekly best-selling, award-winning author the Tantalize series, the Feral series and other critically acclaimed fiction for young readers. MFA Faculty, Vermont College of Fine Arts. Board member, We Need Diverse Books. Ohonvyetv!